Korumburra, VIC

Historic coal town now known for its Coal Creek Community Park and Museum

Historically Korumburra was an important black coal town which grew up to meet the Victorian demands for power in the late 19th century. Today it still has the Coal Creek Community Park and Museum, its only really significant tourist attraction, which is a reminder of its mining past. Since the decline of mining the town has focused on dairy and cattle with tourism (it is on the road to Wilsons Promontory) playing an important part in the local economy.

Location

Korumburra is located 120 km south-east of Melbourne via the M1 and South Gippsland Highway. It is 227 metres above sea level.

Origin of Name

There is some minor confusion over the meaning of "korumburra". It is a local Aboriginal word meaning either "Blowfly" or "maggot" - the larvae of a blowfly. The town was originally known as Coal Creek ... for obvious reasons.

Things to See and Do

Coal Creek Community Park and MuseumThe Coal Creek Community Park and Museum, located just off the South Gippsland Highway at 12 Silkstone Road, consists of a collection of sixty three buildings which have been collected from the surrounding district since 1974. The buildings are either directly relocated (and restored) or faithfully copied from the mining towns of the area c.1890-1920. It is located upon the original site of the Coal Creek Mine (the poppet head and coal mine are the originals), the first profitable black coal mine in Victoria, and situated upon 15 hectares of land, which have been replanted with native flora in an attempt to recreate the rainforest environment of the original township. Some of its features include the ANZAC Room which looks at the impact of World War I on the local community, the poppet head, the mine manager's residence, the Premier Carriage Factory, a cordial factory, a railway station, a printer's shop with olden-style typesetting, a school and church, the mine tunnel for a glimpse of life underground, original settler's cottages, including Edward Hobsen's wattle-and-daub hut (c.1842), milking displays, a mine explosion and horse-drawn vehicle rides. There is a steam train which runs about five times a year and there is a blacksmith on site about once a month - see the website for dates and information. It is open from 10.00 am to 4.30 pm Thursday to Monday (closed Tuesday and Wednesday) Contact (03) 5655 1811 or mobile 0477 004 315. For more detailed information check out http://www.coalcreekvillage.com.au.

The Murals of Korumburra
There are a total of seven impressive murals around Korumburra. They were all painted by local artist, Dennis Leversha, who taught art at both Sale and Wonthaggi technical schools after graduating from RMIT and working as a stage scenery painter at the Princess Theatre in Melbourne.
It is possible to see them all starting with the office wall which is located just up the South Gippsland Highway from the Coal Creek Museum and continuing on into town where the rest are located in the main street - Commercial Street.
The murals depict:
* The Office Wall - the landscape of the former coal mining town
* The wall on the Italian Social Club - Italian pea growers on the hills around the town
* The wall of the service station in Commercial Street - the fire at the Middle Hotel in 1933
* The shop wall in Commercial Street - an image of the shopfronts as they were in the 19th century
* The shop wall in Commercial Street - loading milk cans at the Korumburra Butter Factor
* At the Art Gallery - in front is an image of family and friends enjoying the couutryside around Korumburra
* The Art Gallery Frieze - show the colonial architecture of the town.

Korumburra Heritage TrailThe Korumburra Heritage Trail lists a total of 29 places of historic interest around the town. Many are now no more than "site of" with no remaining structures, but there are a number of genuinely interesting places and buildings around the town which include:

1. Korumburra Railway StationLocated in Station Street, the Korumburra Railway Station was built in 1907 in the rare Queen Anne style. The Heritage Register listing notes: " The complex comprises of a large, predominantly single storey, brick station building with an upper level residence. The red brick, Queen Anne style building features stuccoed banding, terra cotta tiled hip and gable roof with ridge cresting, dormer windows, cantilevered platform veranda and a pedimented entrance to the lobby. Other structures include the corrugated iron clad goods shed, the brick pedestrian subway, and the up side building. While various internal modifications have been made, and several outbuildings have been removed, the station buildings remain largely intact." For more detailed information check out http://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/634/download-report.

3. Korumburra HotelLocated in Commercial Street, the Korumburra Hotel (now known as the Middle Hotel) was built in 1889 by Antonio Radovick who, because he was influential on the construction of the town, is known as the "Father of Korumburra". The hotel was used as their surgery and shop by both the local doctor and the local chemist and in 1890 it was used for a Catholic mass.

11. BraesideLocated at 52 Radovick Street, Braeside was built around 1900 for Peter Hudson, the owner and manager of the Austral Coal Mine. It is an Edwardian design with a bullnose veranda with decorative posts and an unusual central skylight.. The Norfolk pines in the garden were planted around 1900 as well.

15. Post OfficeThis very distinctive building on the corner of Mine Road and Bridge Street, was built by Neil Falconer in 1904. The style is Edwardian with extensions carried out in 1948. It was also the local telephone exchange until it closed down in 1974.

20. Austral HotelLocated on the corner of Mine Road and Bridge Street this hotel was built 1894. The upstairs was used for the local lodge meetings.

26. Lynton HouseLocated on the corner of Commercial Road and Radovick Street, this elegant building was originally occupied by C.E. Brown, the local chemist (hence the sign "The Korumburra Chemist") but was rebuilt in 1929.

Other Attractions in the Area

Cooks Hill Lookout and Strzelecki Cairn
Cooks Hill, located 10 km north of the town via the Korumburra-Warragul Road, provides a panoramic view of the area, including Bass Strait and the Strzelecki Ranges.
Along the road to Cooks Hill is a large cairn, just before you reach the entrance to the Korumburra Golf Club, which commemorates Paul Strzelecki's exploration of the area c.1840.